Promiscuities, by Naomi Wolf (Vintage, £7.99 in UK)

It may be timely and revelatory and all the rest, but it's still profoundly depressing, this

It may be timely and revelatory and all the rest, but it's still profoundly depressing, this. Naomi Wolf's clear-as-crystal prose delves deep into the nasty places of teenage sexuality and exposes them to the horrible light of objective scrutiny, telling a sorry tale of what it meant to come of age as a woman in 1960s America. Men held all the cards: men made the value judgments; men operated an appalling sexual double standard with mind-boggling ease. Nowadays, if anything, matters have got worse - unless the fact that men now commonly address each other, with something approaching affection, by a certain four-letter word beginning with "c", is evidence of a sea-change in attitudes? Wolf obviously believes that articulating the problem will lead to its eventual solution. I hope she's right.

Arminta Wallace

Arminta Wallace

Arminta Wallace is a former Irish Times journalist